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Faith-based Partnerships for Health Promotion

Faith-based Partnerships for Health Promotion. 2008 Network for a Healthy California Annual Conference January 23, 2008 Glovioell Rowland, PhD Marlyn Allicock, PhD, MPH Marci Campbell, PhD, MPH, RD Alexis Williams, MA Carol Carr, MA. Outline.

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Faith-based Partnerships for Health Promotion

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  1. Faith-based Partnerships for Health Promotion 2008 Network for a Healthy California Annual Conference January 23, 2008 Glovioell Rowland, PhD Marlyn Allicock, PhD, MPH Marci Campbell, PhD, MPH, RD Alexis Williams, MA Carol Carr, MA

  2. Outline • Background (Health promotion & faith –based organizations) • Overview of Body & Soul • Partnering with faith communities • Gaining Entry • Working in partnership • Spiritual vs. secular • Program Evaluation • Program Sustainability

  3. Background • In the US African Americans are increased risk for many serious & fatal diseases • Healthy diets promote good health and lower disease risk • How best to influence behaviors (e.g. nutrition, physical activity) practices for African Americans? • African American Churches as partners for targeting nutrition behaviors for AA & addressing health disparities

  4. Why Faith-based partnerships? • High attendance (>80% AA adults in southeast; >85% adults in US) • Importance of church institution in community • Role of the pastor as opinion leader and communicator • Resources/opportunities • Spiritual health/Soul: mind-body-spirit

  5. Program Overview • A nutrition program to encourage African Americans church members to eat more FV • 4 Pillars • Pastoral Involvement • Policy/environmental change • Educational Activities • Peer-counseling • http://www.bodyandsoul.nih.gov

  6. Research Phases Efficacy Testing: 2 RCTs Campbell et al., AJPH 1999 Campbell et al, Health Educ Behav 2000 Resnicow et al. J Cancer Edu 2000 Body &Soul Effectiveness trial Resnicow et al, AJ Prev Med 2004 Campbell, Allicock et al, Health Educ Behav 2006 Body &Soul Dissemination Evaluation

  7. Research Partnerships with Churches • Black Churches United for Better Health • Wellness for African Americans Through Churches (WATCH) • http://www.watchproject.com • WATCH II • e-WATCH • ACTS of Wellness • Body & Soul • http://www.bodyandsoul.nih.gov

  8. Challenges & Lessons Learned • Careful attention to the partnership and developing trust • Everything on the table approach • Effort to understand social/cultural context through formative research • Plans for sustainability

  9. Gaining Entry • Recruitment Methods • Cold calls • Snow-ball recruitment • Known networks • Media • Don’t judge a church by its size • Who’s in charge? • Positional vs. personal power • Identify key contact for planning

  10. Gaining Entry • Getting to know your church partner • Face time: food & fellowship, church member buy-in, interpersonal connection • Include both advocates and potential adversaries in program planning • Reality Check • Personal beliefs in conflict/barrier to partnership? • Importance of being genuine

  11. Working in the Church • Training/Meeting Activities • Setting the right tone • Time frame • Health program/funding timeline vs. church calendar • Materials Development • Spiritual and cultural appropriateness • Language, health literacy

  12. Efforts to understand the social/cultural context • Importance of church liaison/insider Sources: • Pastors • Members • Key group leaders (e.g. Elder, “Mother” of the church, church board etc.) • Who else?

  13. Plans for Sustainability • Begins at start up, on-going process • Church’s track record for making permanent changes • Present church situation/structure/staffing • Resources needed to sustain program

  14. Resources • Campbell, Allicock Hudson, Resnicow et al. (2007). Church-based Health Promotion Interventions: Evidence and Lessons Learned. Annu. Rev. Public Health; 28:213-34. • Goldman & Roberson (2004). Churches, academic institutions, and public health: partnerships to eliminate health disparities. NC Med J; 65(6): 368-72. • Tuggle, M. (2000). It Is Well with My Soul: Churches and Institutions Collaborating for Public Health. APHA.

  15. Contact Information • Glovioell Rowland, PhD Pasadena Church of God growland@usc.edu • Marlyn Allicock, PhD, MPH University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill allicock@email.unc.edu

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